Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 30, Number 245, Decatur, Adams County, 15 October 1932 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

Fort Wayne Central Defeats Yellow Jackets, 25

TIGERS SGORE EASY VICTORY OVER DECATUR Visitors Use 35 Men To Defeat Locals in First Home Game Fort Wayne Central used thirty-five men to beat the Decatur Yellow Jackets, 25-6, in the Hortonmeus’ first home football game of the season played yesterday afternoon at the Niblick field. The locals played hard but were overwhelmed by the man power of the visitors. Coach Mendenhall started the game with his shock troops. After his subs hud made three costly furnb les and Feasel had scored a touchdown he was compelled to run in 1 his regulars. Decatur held the visitors scoreless for two of the four periods. Hill's punts were a great advantage to Decatnc and prevented .seven a' potential touchdowns. Stricklcr filled the veteran Buffenhargers shoes in good shape. BulTenbarger was able to play only a few minutes on account of a leg injury received in practice this week. It is believed that he will ( be in shape for the North Side game, which wit be played here . next Thursday. Central started the second team ] with a hard plunging game. Twice ; they had the ba’l to Decatur’s ten . yard line when the locals recovered fumbles and punted to safety. , For the greater part of the period | the two te.'iiri fought on even,] terms. In the next qua. ier Fort vVayne 1 again got the ball into scoring ter- !

In the Eastern Football Spotlight Bv HARDIN BURNLEY roMore&ou)' \ iaj OAi£ _ oF this • *-•-• \ vjeekS big games - r ' n - 1 ’ 3:um Syn.i.citf, Me, mihis ,W,u : j \

FOUR grand teams take the eastern football spotlight this week in two games which are, somebody or other might s£y, fraught with interest. We're referring to the Pitt-Army game and the Pennsylvania-Dartmouth game, inclusive. And. taking the games in tiLe order named, we find that Pitt wjs th» 'astern champion of last year, hanging up the scalps of Miami, lowa West Virginia, Western Re serve Penn State, Carnegie Tech. 1 Arm> and Nebraska. You’ll re- j member that only Notre Dame was; able to down the Smoky City team. And this year. Jock Sutherland has another powerful team to work with in retaining that flagpole sitling record of 1931. Jock Suther- i land learned what he know* at the . k,' » .

ritory and lost it on a fumble. D< catur regained possession of the ball in mid-field. Feasel pulled jdown Strickler's twenty yard pass i and raced thirty yards for a touchdown. The point after touchdown i failed. Coach Mendenhall rushed in tlie Central regulars who scored two touchdowns in six minutes before the end of the half. Thornburg scored first for the visitors on nil end run. Hawkins plunged ithrough the line for the extra point Burnette later scored on an end ; run. Decatur blocked the attempted drop kick. Score at the end of tthe first half, Decatur. G; Centra!,' 13, Mendenhall again started the [second team in the third quarter. | A thirty-yard pass from Miliken to I Hayes put Central into scoring dis- j tance. Miliken went over on the ■ next play for a touchdown. The kick was blocked. A few minutes biter Miliken scored again. The | attempt for drop kick failed. The quarter ended, Central. 25; Decatur, ; 6. The quarter was a see-saw i battle — both Horton and Mendenhall substituting freely. Mendendial! rail in the first team bui a de-. itermined Yellow Jacket squad held Ithem scoreless. Score at the end of the game, 1 iCentra'. 25; Decatur, fi. Lineup and summary: Decatur Central Feasel I.L Cantwell Roop LT Hughs, Butler LG Smith Allwein C Hart Conrad RG McClure Ford RT Paul j Townsend RE Hayes Striekler Q Kern ii Elzey LH Jack Seals M Hill RH . Romano, Saunders FB Korn Substitutions: Decatur. Schie-h man. Rnffenharger Cloud Myers !; Eadv. Sheets, Schultz, Ehingpr: ; Fort Wayne Central. Trott, Silto, j, Keis. Swift, Greenwell, Jensen, j Hawkins. Burnett. Winegart, Warfield, Thornburg. Miliken. Jean i <

knee of Pop Warner, whose coaching at the same institution msde Pittsburgh live up to its Panther reputation ten years or so ago. Sutherland made the Lafayette team the champions of 1921. and when he came to Pittsburgh he kept up the pace that his teacher had set. In the game with Army, Pitt faces a formidable obstacle on the roau to glory Last year. Pitt disposed of Army lo the tune of 2G-0, caining the victory through a pyro•erhnical displav of forward pass , mg. Pitt goes up against the Army system in their game with the West Pointers, and astute observers seem to think that Coach Major Ralph 1. Sasse has something that will flatten the Panther this year Tom Kilday, big soldier, will play fall-

Seals. Langes, Rittenhause. Bless- ■ tng. Wineten, Juiliard, Rhodes. 1 Brassier Markon, Exner, Folks, ; Thurman. Warfield. Referee — Bauer. Fort Wayne; i Empire — Gaunt, Wabash; headi linesman —Catterton, Fort Wayne. I Score by quarters: Decatur 0 G 0 0— 6 Fort Wayne 0 13 12 0 —25 i — ——o HIGH SCROOL FOOTBALL Portland, 19; Garrett. 13. Muticie, 13; lech, Indianapolis 0. (' th 'drai (Indianapolis), 19. Cnn- : n .-rsville. 0. S ! lvcr;ridge (Indianapolis) 12: J’ff (Lafayette,) 0. Bloomington 7: Manual (Indiana- : polls), <l. : Independents Play Fort Wayne Sunday The Decatur Independent foot- ! hall team will play its second game of the season Sunday afternoon at > Niblick field, with the Fort Wayne independents forming the opposi- i tlon. Decatur won the opening con-, ■ test last Sunday from the Hunting ; te n A. C„ 13 to 9, in an excellent j game. The Fort Wayne team has been , i formed from three teams which were in the field last season and is I expected to give the locals a real j battle tomorrow. The opening j kickoff is scheduled for 2:30 o'clock. o Ball State Scores Easy Victory, 34-12 Mancie, Ind.. Oct. 15 —(CP) —j bps 11 state easily defeated the Oak ' I land city c liege football team 34 ito 12 here yesterday. Ball State! scared six points i:i the second; quarter and 14 each in the third! and f urth qit triers. Oakland aenrov! j its t uc'. d wits in the first two quarters. Loveless scored three touchdowns j ml four - xtra points for I cie eleven.

back in the big game, and the re--1 suits in practice point to a smooth- ' working machine. As for Ihc Perm-Dartmouth game i —here wil, be a hard-fought strug I gle by two fighting teams. Harvey Harman at the Philadelphia citadel of learning, has an eager bunch of footballers who know the game and ■ are out to win. The why of that is found in the records the last Penn- , Dartmouth game was in 1920, when Dartmouth marched off with the victory in one of those scores: 21-20. In resuming relations on the gridiron with Pennsylvania. Dartmouth’s big eleven will enter Franklin Field with more than a desire to show the Quakers how it was done in that last game So-o-o-o-. we’ll i have to see. Copyright. U3J Sing reiiury, syndiMM. lot

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT SATURDAY. OCTOBER 15, 1932.

Pritice Eddie's Swedish Visit Revives Rumors of Romance * * * " * * * England Expectantly Awaits Outcome of Heir’s Sojourn with Princess Ingrid’s Family—But Matchmakers Have Been Wrong Before. '■ ... —— — ■ , ■■■■■■— — * I’a les 4 Swedish match that has nothing to dn with the late Wat Kreuger ii what the royal matchmakers of Europe are expecting to grow out of the visit that Edward, Prince of W a !e§» is making to Stockholm. Ostensibly, the British heir went to the Swedish capital to open a British trade exhibition, but the fact that he was enthusiastically received by the Swedish royal family and is staying in the palace as the guest of King Gustav gave rise to rumors of a revival of the Prince's romance with the lovely Prin cess Ingrid, granddaughter of the king. Two years ago the gossips said that Eddie was about to announce his engagement to Ingrid, who was then visiting her royal relatives in London But somehow the affair fizzled out. If Wales were to put a ring on the finger to every girl to whom h* has been rumored engaged, he’d have a harem the envy of a Bedouin sheik. His first rumored engagement was to Pirr.cess Victoria Louise, only daughter of the then Kaiser of Germany. The war wrote finis to that. He was also said to be contemplating marriage with Princess lleana of Roumania But she is row the wife of Archduke Anton of Hapsburg end the mother of a baby son Then, too, the gossips coupled his name with that of Princess Beatrice of Spain, but nothing ever came of it. She is now an exile with her family Tom Republican Spain and still single. Besides princesses, Eddie's nam- h*s been linked to that of scores of pretty commoners. So wearisome did this become to His Highness that he no longer dances with single girh, choosing young married women, thus gagging Dame Rumor very *• lively.

MAKES REPLY TO < O. O. P. CHARGES GONTINUEI rtt'lM FAOK ONE* ship f 1 t Germany and ther? in'- \ | vested r.i high grade Ger nan equi- ( l ties.. "At the time the company bcuan to function tire markit value .f 10,- ' i 'CO marks was approximately $2.50. ; j As a vault of the investments made 1 j the book value of these snares each d n arly $8 a share, where-;, upon in late 1924 r early 1925; the company under my supervision | liquidated. "Its shareholders were paid at ; the above rite which yielded ..; proximutely three times the amount ot tiie value of the marks at toe time f their deposit. TO INVESTIGATE JAHNCKE’S AIDE CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE lahncke's assistant is Sam Jones, age 29, formerly a To’edo, Ohio, newspaperman and later employed ' by the Republican national commiitee. Hr- has an assistant paid personally by Jahncke. — — o - —— 03ITUARY Raymond Oren Sheets, son of Ml.-, ' and Mrs. Samuel She-*s was born in Wren. Ohio August 29, 1894 ami j lied Out. st'i 1932 at the age of 38 1 years 1 month and 6 dry*. At th ag‘ rs f urtee.i Raymond j Joine d th? United Brethren Church ;at Wren, Oht>. On July 19th, 1913 I he was united in mtrriage to Miss! Font- Walt.rs. To this union two i children were horn. The dauglit r Verna Martille died In Infancy and the son Carl survives. Surviving are tie wife and son , Carl, th? mother Mrs. Addie Sheets-Pi-lser of Huntington an J the following brothers and sister: Dwight ■ Decatur. Fred of Sauth Bend. Mrs. Fred McConnell, Harry, Everj'ett, R x and Dick all of Decatur | Th= father preceded him in death j six years ago. — The h ades of a giant turbo-gen-erator that is providing electrical power In a N'e w Jersey city travel |at a speed of 810 miles an hour, j faster than any other machinery ever built. Noise Is produced In a new toy cannon by striking a strip of thin j paper with a rubber bail partly open at the bottom, air compressed iin the hall breaking thp paper The largest railway station in Yugoslavia has been proposed for Belgrade for use in connection with i n new bridge that is nearing tom|pletion across the Danube river.

George R. Dale Is Still Holding Office Muncie, Ind., Oct. 15 —(Upl—l ; Ge--:ge R. Dal?, 'militant Mancie i may. r oust d by the city c uncil, . eoatirued tj hold ofice t day In the ! face of a orm.l demand to relinquish it to Earl Everett, a', point- j td to fill the position by th? couu-' cil. Quo warrant? proceedings t test I title so • the flee will h? filed in j circuit court Monday, Everett said : ; Formal demand f r the office was | read to Dale by Everett before a | small oroup in the mayor’s oTice, at City Hall late yesterday. Dale! p omptly refused. T e city council voted to eust i Dale f 'liewing his convieti:n on a! Federal charge of conspiracy to virlate the liquor laws. Purdue To Present Doctors Degrees Lafayette. Ini, Oct. 15 —(CP)—j The highest honor Pu due Univer- i sity is empowered to award wan to | be given at illomecomir.; exerci. cs! here today t two graduates in the j class ,f 188*. Presentl-.'g honors dupng fcome- ■ erring forth. first time In the! ■school's history, Doctors' degl-ees ■ w>;e bestowed on. Charles Russ ißichards, president of Lehigh Uni-! versity, and Bruce R.'.ers. Lradon bo k designer. The former was t . ! he made Doctor of Engineering and ; th? latter Doctor of i iumane Let-1 ters. ) A dinner for the 1892 team, the first to win a confer, ic. tlt ni. ion-' ship for Purdue, was held last' night. Gov. Har y G. Leslie, a Pur , 'du? graduate, was here for the aca- ! ih tile Parid?. , Additior of one per cent of cop- ; Per to stainless steel has produced ; a hew alloy that is easier to work and does not require high temperi ature treatment for annea’ing. ; 0 The production of rust free and !acid resis*:ig steel is to be begun in Norway at a plant that will have |Un annual capacity of between 40,j out) and 59,000 metric tons. The Chilean government is build I ing an extensive system of high | class highways to connect tt« prln--1 ripal centers of population and tap the rich resources of the country. A paper that does not make any 1 sound when handled has been dei veloped for use in radio studios to pre -it the erickling t ordinary i tapers interfering with broadcast:). ', o Live slock wanted at the Community Auction Sale Dei catur, Tueg. Oct. 18 2t

PLEASANT MILLS LEAGUE WINNER Softball Team Wins Adams County Softball League Championship Pleasant Mills high school soft hall team won the championship of the league by defeating Kirkland high school Friday afternoon. 8-2. ; while Monmouth was losing to i Monroe. 4 to 3. In the Monroe-Monmonth game, 1 Monroe scored the winning run in the sixth inning Monmouth had jled up to this time but was nosed jout by Monroe, 4 to 3. The final standing: \V L Pet. Pleasant Mi’ls 4 2 GG7 | Monroe 3 3 .500 | Monmouth 3 3 .500 I Kirkland 2 4 .333 PRES. HOOVER TO GIVE ADDRESS AT CLEVELAND CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE V ♦ • ♦♦ ♦ . • • »•*...•* — — • • • • • Mr. Hoover speaks at Cleveland jaf 8:30 p. m. He will return to the ! station immediat ?'y after his ; speech. The President's party Included: she President and Mrs. Hoover; Postmaster-General Walter Brown of Ohio; Lawrence Richey and W alter Newton, two of the president's secretaries; Michael Gallagher, Cleveland coal operator and Republican leader; Oapt. Joel T. Boone. I'. S N., White House physician: Miss Myra McGrath, personal secretary to the President, and Miss Mi died Ha l. secretary to Mrs. Hoover. A detail of U. S. secret

-,#r Stars of the Big Ten I . 1.1..,.. § t-^pl e fc " I THREAT"' /I VERSATILE AiORTH WESTERAJ "'WI STAR--RENTIER. ZIMMERMAN I AMD MOHLER. are three Or THE ¥/ j wZKf? A GAMES OUTsTANDIAJG QACKS ! \\ 1 ! [3 19)?. King Icafurcs Syndicne, Inc , t.neat Br.tam ogh» J

IT is the usual lot of a great football player to reach national fame only in his senior year. His star flashes over the horizon for a few brief weeks—then fades forever. Une out ot fifty is heard from later for conspicuous ability in I some other field. , As this season started, however, 1 j there were left three names which 1 one could place out of the bibliogi raphy of the 1931 gridiron campaign. Orv Mohler of the Southern California Trojans, Don Zimmerman of Tulane, Pug Rentner of North--1 western. Where is the football fan who cannot recite at some length the virtues of these warriors on the > | striped turf’ ; Yet instead of having passed into - oblivion last fall, these pieces of t human dynamite are back again—-

| service men, reporters and photo-! (graphers also was included. The President worked almost up : : to the last minute on his Cleveland j i address. I I'pwards of 30.900 persons were ! expected to hear him at Cleveland ! tonight. Man May Sue For Breach Os Promise Chicago, Oct. 15 — <U.R) — Judge Joseph B. David established a II precedent in American jurisprud- . ence today when he ruled that a ('jilted suitor may sue his fickle ; love for breach of promise, i He struck the blow for mascu- , line rights, in superior court when I he denied the demurrer of attor--1 neys for Mrs. Mary Leutjg Brown of Glencoe to the suit of Aliansou Ma’ott for 125.000 damage. Malott charges that ufteH Mrs. Brown. ; then the widow LeuUg. became ) betrothed to him as the climax of i a Canadian romance, she married I j his rival. "There is no precedent for this case in American jurisprudence or i common law. ' Judge David said. “But the ruling is fundamentally correct although, according to • social psychology tile light to sue for breach of promise is sulel ,• woman's." -a Five Bandits Hold Up New York Bank New York. Oct. 15 (UP)—Five t'.vout fill bandits held up a branch - to th? Public National Bank and ( Trust empa-’y In the Bronx today , and escaped with between SIO,OOO and $12,004) after t eaeening nine . imd yes a-cd three patr ns. On c‘ the robbers fired a shot at H. A. Adams, manager of the > branch and put four ..ther bullets . tttdo a wail as a warning that they I I “meant business.''

■ and if we may judge from earlyI season accounts —bigger and better than ever, if possible. Orv. Mohler is the 23-ycar-old youngster win. is so good in an open ■ field (cluttered only with eleven i men of the opposition trying to , bring him down) that Howard Jones, his coach, says there has never been his equal. . Don Zimmerman is the Tulane i triple-threat who cut such a swath ■ through eastern and southern foot- • ball last year. He was unpredictable. his play was apparently incapa- | Me of analysis, lie is back again to pester Tulane's opponents. And—Notre Dame please note — Png Rentner is lugging the pigskin i again for Northwestern. The Big 1 Ten has had quite enough of this ’ fellow, but the only consolation in that he’s a fairly bright boy who 1 will graduate with his class. He won’t be back again. Any one of these three outstand-

Kinds J)* iiijfe: >lore Than gSf !, T ’ v utnK ; r » ndc ~:s ■ - urrsaw X. mg D . .: Ml I ' 00 " Hs ■ ijD<| the 10.-i !i!.;:ipy. Oiiio i.Hiinn Head P Dies Os Injujfl^f I Ralph D r.,ie. kfj . the Ohio A: - iuan t„, ? j 08 ■£><{ men who lie , ■ 'lied hw- ti he' k:■ \-(l in a:. J accident r.»d t week anUntil^H which ( riiiiiic t'liPl>« 1 mein it re, ~(d - alni i 1 paralyzed •<: !e survived Wffl - " ■ . Football. Decatur 1 dents vs. 1 Ort Wavne pendent-. Sundiw.' Fie'tl. Kickoff 2:30. t sion 10f-2.')c. (iiKid saatßpc 1 sured. Be tlicic. K —- Decatur ( omniunity .uflGf ‘ tion Sa’e. Taesdat.

• ing stars would bo ent ' tl '„j M i • time, to comment on me j, the game in which they • centfy Mohler, mightiest o i jans, was talking at lolll i dead ball rule. . > “It’s a noble expetiw* ll^* I smiled. “No. of course i. 1 ceed in its purpose, and i. the game of many thin- ( ! “If a man is going w f l nv thi 1 will be hurt in spite ot au^ the rules can do about i • not prescribe against ae t,t football injuries are accident* 1 strict sense of the word “Personally 1 wouW P«‘* t , g , my chances and I *’***,.p]»jor® . voicing the sentiments v , of players. i "Certainly I believe t h ' r p |,g i handicap me as it *?.“/, r«t* ■ who depends upon shi up" than sheer power for ya m Copyright, Hit Slog yoiLurM i 4